/quant-ux

Quant-UX - Prototype, Test and Learn

Primary LanguageVueGNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

Docker Image Build and Push to Dockerhub - CI/CD

Quant-UX - Prototype, Test and Learn

Quant UX is a research, usability and prototyping tool to quickly test your designs and get data driven insights. This repo contains the front end. You can find a working demo at https://quant-ux.com/#/

Develpment setup

npm install

Compiles and hot-reloads for development

npm run serve

Compiles and minifies for production

npm run build

Run your unit tests

npm run test:unit

Lints and fixes files

npm run lint

Installation

The easiest way to get your own installation up and running is using the prebuild Docker images by Brian McGonagill. You can find the repo and instructions at https://github.com/bmcgonag/quant-ux-docker/

Manual Installation

Quant-UX has two components. A front-end (this package) and a backend (qux-java). The front-end needs Node.js (> 12) installed. The backend needs a Mongo DB, a Mail Server (SMPT) and Java (> 1.8). The front-end comes with it's own mini web server, which also include a proxy that redirects all request to the correct backend.

Backend

  • Install Mongo DB (> 4.4)

  • Install Java (1.8)

  • Checkout the backend

git clone https://github.com/KlausSchaefers/qux-java.git
  • This contains already a compiled version of the backend in the release folder

  • Edit the matc.conf file to setup the correct mongo and mails server details. More details can be found here: https://github.com/KlausSchaefers/qux-java

  • Start the server, or install as a service in Linux.

java -jar release/matc.jar -Xmx2g -conf matc.conf -instances 1

Front-end

  • Install Node.js (> 12)

  • Clone repo

git clone https://github.com/KlausSchaefers/quant-ux.git
  • Install all dependecies:
npm install
  • Build
npm run build

Config front-end

  • Set the proxy server url as en ENV variable
export QUX_PROXY_URL=https://your.quant-ux.server.com // backend host

export QUX_WS_URL= wss.quant-ux.server.com // web socket server

  • Start
node server/start.js

Reverse Proxy

Now you should have a a running system. It is not secure yet. The best is to put both behind a NGINX reverse proxy, which handles SSL.

You can use https://letsencrypt.org/ to create SSL certificates